Steven Barnes, Lion's Blood

May 27, 2009 22:37

48. Steven Barnes, Lion's Blood.It is the 1860's (Gregorian calendar), and North America is being colonized by Egypt, Ethiopia, Vikings, and China; the Azteca rule Mesoamerica. Our story follows the ever-permutating relationship between Kai, the son of an Ethiopian official in New Djibouti (near what we know as Galveston, Texas), and Aidan, his ( Read more... )

(delicious), sf/fantasy, muslim, alternate-history, slavery

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bookelfe May 28 2009, 05:51:15 UTC
For the most part I really enjoyed Lion's Blood when I read it, but I have to say, the fact that Stephen Barnes puts so much work generally into making the historical timeline seem plausible made the places where it doesn't make sense stand out to me even more - for example, the reference he tosses off about a slave called Leonardo da Vinci despite the fact that, first of all, in this alternate history it seems pretty unlikely that enough of Da Vinci's ancestors could have met up in enough appropriate ways to produce him, and second of all, even if they had by some miracle produced him genetically, he there is no way he would be named Leonardo da Vinci in Barnes' occupied Italy! This is the kind of thing that wouldn't bother me in a book like Blonde Roots where it's all like that, but that nags in a book where it's all supposed to make sense.

On a completely unrelated note, there is also a CD of music that was created in association with the book that I liked a lot too!

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sanguinity May 28 2009, 06:15:28 UTC
Yes, da Vinci and Mozart both jarred me, for those same reasons. But they went by so fast that they didn't bug me for very long. Which is mostly what I ask for.

A CD? *goes searching* Insh'allah, by Heather Alexander (who is now performing as Alexander James Adams). Thanks for the tip!

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bookelfe May 28 2009, 14:03:07 UTC
Yeah, the plot definitely moves fast enough to speed you over the nitpicks and bumps!

You're welcome. :D When I bought it you could get all the tracks for download/purchase off Amazon, though I don't know if that's still the case.

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annwfyn May 28 2009, 09:24:52 UTC
That sounds really interesting. I've added that to my amazon and bookmooch wishlists and hopefully will acquire it in the not too distant future.

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browngirl May 28 2009, 13:41:00 UTC
So far this is the best Reversed Slavery novel I've read (of a vast three or so).

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sanguinity May 28 2009, 15:24:13 UTC
Hee. I've got similar vast experience. ;-)

I thought Lion's Blood was the best novel. Blonde Roots reads to me like an altogether different creature (satire); I would highly recommend it on its own basis, but not as a novel, if that makes any sense.

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browngirl May 31 2009, 22:31:20 UTC
That makes total sense!

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